U.S. shared PRISM data with Dutch intelligence agency

Dutch intelligence agencies have received info from the U.S. National Security Agency's broad online surveillance program.

It just keeps getting bigger.

A former Dutch intelligence analyst says that country also uses the U.S.'s PRISM surveillance program, which allows the NSA and FBI that can have access to anyone's Google, Yahoo, and Facebook communications.

The source, who has asked to remain anonymous, is a former employee of Dutch intelligence agency AIVD, and came out to the paper De Telegraaf in a story published Tuesday. According to the English-language Dutch News site DutchNews.dl, the source used to monitor Dutch Muslim extremists.

The Netherlands cooperated with intelligence requests from the U.S., the source said, noting that "there are agents ready to deal with requests for information inside companies and institutions." But it worked the other way, too. AIVD could ask for PRISM data from the U.S., the source said, and receive an answer in about five minutes.

Moreover, the source claimed there's a Dutch counterpart to PRISM: "There are a couple of those secret programs like PRISM active in the Netherlands."

Bits of Freedom, a Dutch digital activist group, was outraged by the news.

“We are shocked to learn that the Dutch intelligence services have access to the same digital dragnet that the US government has secretly deployed against millions of innocent civilians,” announced Simone Halink, a legal advisor for Bits of Freedom.

The AIVD source's claims would contradict sentiments made by Dutch government officials. According to Bits of Freedom, Ronald Plasterk, the country's Minister of Home Affairs, said Friday that monitoring civilians is a violation of civil rights.

Correction: The Dutch intelligence agency is AIVD, not AVID as previously reported, and the company's former employee came out to De Telegraaf.

Only days after a leak disclosed the U.S. government’s controversial online surveillance activities, a memorandum obtained by the Globe and Mail has revealed that Canada’s Defense Minister Peter MacKay approved a “secret electronic eavesdropping program” in late 2011.